Refuse and Refusal in the Art of Donigan Cumming
“I don’t like waste – either of things or of human beings.” Donigan Cumming uttered these words, in an apparently offhand manner, during a group meeting held at the Vidéographe offices to discuss the creation of this web project.1 But in the years I’ve known him, I’ve come to realize that in the case of this artist and his work, nothing is ever truly offhand. And, since the Vidéographe meeting, the statement has continued to resonate in my mind, further inflecting my understanding of his practice. In my view, it provides a key to explaining an “artistic attitude” peculiar to Cumming – the approach to art-making that shapes both the content of his imagery and the way he acts upon it. At once taunting and tender, it is an attitude that aims to constantly shift the ground of interpretation, destabilizing viewers and prohibiting them from ever settling into complacency. Although characterized by a recuperative dimension that makes the gesture of revisiting or reformulating previous work central, Cumming’s approach should not be viewed as an example of a current phenomenon that sees artists, upon reaching a certain stage in their lives and careers, compelled to reflect on past production.2 In Cumming’s practice, the distaste for waste, and its attendant desire to rehash and reorganize his own material, has been there from the outset.
It is generally accepted that Cumming first began developing his critical practice in the three-part black-and-white photographic series Reality and Motive in Documentary Photography (1986). The series, published in catalogue form in 1986 to accompany a large-scale exhibition produced by the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography, was also shown in smaller instalments throughout the early 1980s (figs. 01–03). At the core of this groundbreaking work was Cumming’s personal argument with the tradition of documentary photography – a deep suspicion of but also active engagement with the notion of documentary truth that has remained a constant in his photographic and video work since. To enact the argument, he chose to focus his camera on a group of “disadvantaged” people living on the margins of society, several of whom would become important co-conspirators, appearing repeatedly in his works over the following decades.3 The faces Cumming photographed in Reality and Motive in Documentary Photography – both as sociological “types” and as individuals – have in fact come to define his oeuvre in the sense of being inseparable from it. As the first, forceful step in the creation of what has been termed Cumming’s “invented community,”4 the series may be understood as the foundation, the basic fabric, of what was to come.
A direct offshoot of Reality and Motive in Documentary Photography is the series The Stage, published in 1991 as a photobook (figs. 04–06) and presented in exhibition form in The Mirror, The Hammer, and The Stage. Described by Cumming as “the laugh track behind the pictures,” The Stage is a generous compilation of images he had made for the first series but left on the cutting-room floor. As a photobook, it consists of a dense sequence of 250 full-bleed, vertical photographs bookended by two short texts (or rather one text divided into two sections).5 Compared with the images of Reality and Motive in Documentary Photography, those in The Stage actually seem less staged, or at least less static: while the former portrays its subjects in the guise of rather stoic statues, the latter is full of exuberance, spontaneous movement, and obvious jokes. What comes through most clearly, perhaps, is the fact that the shoots Cumming organized involved a fair amount of trial and error and, frankly, messing about. The standard power relation between photographer and subject, which one might imagine held sway in the initial series, is destabilized, and any presumption about the part each played within that relation turned on its head. This sense of destabilization is reinforced by The Stage’s form, which, with its uninterrupted yet staccato rhythm, purposefully thwarts the natural impulse to read it as a story. Cumming, who by his own admission is allergic to art that is too easy or manageable, was deliberately aiming to frustrate, and he succeeded in making viewers uncomfortable, not only by avoiding linear narrative but by forcing them to rethink their perception of his work. Already, with this second major piece, the artist was provoking the suspicion that he cannot be relied upon to do the same thing twice, no matter how hard to digest the initial thing may have been.
In the mid-1990s, Cumming turned to video, a medium he has continued to exploit compellingly ever since. It was while shooting Pretty Ribbons (1993), a body of photographs created in collaboration with Nettie Harris (fig. 07), one of the subjects who first appeared in Reality and Motive in Documentary Photography, that the artist began using a video camera. Harris died shortly after Pretty Ribbons was completed, so Cumming integrated the footage he had collected into the video A Prayer for Nettie (1995), a “grotesque elegy” (in the artist’s words) that would later become a stimulus for new works. In 2004, he published the photobook Lying Quiet, which complemented Donigan Cumming: Moving Pictures, an exhibition bringing together a decade of video work that was presented at Toronto’s Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art (MOCCA) in 2005. Similar to The Stage in its composition, Lying Quiet is composed of 200 full-bleed, horizontal colour photographs (92 single images and 27 four-image montages) preceded by an essay by Peggy Gale, curator of the MOCCA exhibition, and followed by an afterword by Cumming. The photographs, assembled to function like an avalanche of in-your-face visual stimulation, are stills extracted from the 143 hours of footage recorded for the eighteen videos which Cumming had by that time produced (figs. 08–10). Consisting of “the images in-between the dramatic passages that constitute the edited tapes,”6 many of them close-ups, Lying Quiet allows viewers the time to fully absorb the subtle corporeal details of the people Cumming has filmed and the depth of feeling they evoke, without the “distractions” of sound, movement, and individual personality. Made after ten years of video work, but also after almost twenty years of engagement with a particular group of subjects, this photobook presents as a kind of meditative – though not restful – return to the muteness of the early photographic series.7
In 2003, Cumming began work on Epilogue and Prologue, two monumental photographic murals that would be completed in 2005 (figs. 11–13).8 Modelled on the compositional structure of Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s The Suicide of Saul (1562) and James Ensor’s Christ’s Entry into Brussels in 1889 (1888), respectively, they are made up of innumerable photographic fragments culled from Cumming’s previous series – or, as he puts it, “from garbage in the studio.”9 The artist painstakingly cut out thousands of figures drawn chiefly from Reality and Motive in Documentary Photography, The Stage, and Lying Quiet, overlaying them in some areas with thick paint and gilt, and combining them to create two extravagantly layered, tactile collages of epic proportions. Borrowing a religious undertone from the paintings they emulate, both of which picture religious themes in contemporaneous settings, Prologue and Epilogue imbue Cumming’s familiar subjects with a new symbolic potency, as though the cord that once tied them to the real was being finally and irremediably cut. Paradoxically, this instance of elevation to a sacred realm is the result of an essentially iconoclastic gesture – the act of debasing or destroying worshipped imagery. But the gesture is not levelled at individual images, or even particular subjects, but at the oeuvre as a whole.10 It is tempting to see these works as an incitement by the artist, to his viewers, to once again discard the foundations on which their interpretation of his works had previously been based.
In the late 2000s, Cumming’s work took another unexpected turn with a series of drawings titled Kincora (2008), named after Kinkora Avenue, a street in downtown Montreal that was razed in the late 1980s and on which a number of his subjects lived. These drawings, which first appeared in print in a self-published artist’s book, draw attention to the intense physicality of the iconoclastic gesture (figs. 14–16).11 As with Prologue and Epilogue, the Kincora drawings’ source material is photographic, yet here the source has been utterly – and repeatedly – transformed by the artist’s hand. Using broad, vigorous strokes of media such as pencil, charcoal, and watercolour, Cumming deformed familiar figures, taken mainly from The Stage, and adorned them with wings, perhaps recasting them as fallen angels. While the original photographs remain recognizable, there is a fervour and an obsessiveness to the act of transformation that renders them wholly different beasts. Together, the Kincora drawings create the impression that this act possessed a cathartic dimension, as though it were part of a private mourning process, a way of dealing with the death of the individuals depicted – and of others.12 Here, the iconoclastic gesture is not fuelled purely by aggression but also by what I surmise to be care, for no other reason than the time obviously involved in the process. It is a form of re-editing that, perhaps because of the tactility of the drawing medium, speaks especially convincingly to the artist’s own bodily investment.
Excerpts from the Kincora series have been included in one of Cumming’s latest monographs, Donigan Cumming, a retrospective take on his career published jointly by Dazibao (Montreal) and VU (Quebec City) in 2012.13 This selective survey, which also features images from Reality and Motive in Documentary Photography, The Stage, Pretty Ribbons, Lying Quiet, Prologue, and Epilogue, is another recent example of the artist’s creative reworking of his own material. This is not a new tactic, for, as we have seen, his own imagery has always been treated as fair game – not only in the production of new works but also in their reinterpretation via different modes of display. (It would be interesting to compare the many ways in which Cumming’s various series have been exhibited and consistently refashioned within specific contexts of presentation.) To me, the impulse to re-edit is indicative of the kind of relationship he has had with his own work, but also of the relationship he has maintained with his viewers, whether real or projected. It may be that negative reactions to the more controversial aspects of Cumming’s practice have had the effect of fuelling further provocations, of galvanizing the artist to continue to question the basis of such reactions. It may be that the act of destabilizing viewers has been part of a process of eradicating any form of reverence for the image – both the image as such and the images that compose his oeuvre. In this sense, there is no authentic moment, no original work of which subsequent ones have been copies. There is just work.
- Cumming, Donigan. Presentation at Vidéographe, Montreal, July 11, 2019.
- On the phenomenon of artists reviewing and re-editing past work, see my essays “Revisiting,” in Serge Clément: Archipel (Paris and Montreal: Éditions Loco and Occurrence, 2018); and “Gabor Szilasi: On Emotion and the Photographic Archive,” Ciel variable 108 (Winter 2018), p. 22–31.
- The series Reality and Motive in Documentary Photography is made up of three distinct parts. The first pictures this group of people, who are living in difficult circumstances in Montreal and with whom Cumming’s work has been closely associated, and the second presents, in similar poses, individuals living in the suburbs. For the third, Cumming cast his subjects as Elvis Presley fans and wove their portraits into a complex narrative involving a woman in Arkansas who believed that Elvis was communicating with her through the radio and wrote letters to him via a national tabloid.
- See Scott Birdwise, “Contact and Community,” in Donigan Cumming, ed. France Choinière (Montreal and Quebec City: Dazibao and VU, 2012), p. 7.
- The text relays passages from Cecil B. DeMille’s 1956 film The Ten Commandments, as remembered by Albert Ross Smith, one of Cumming’s principal subjects. See Donigan Cumming, The Stage (Montreal: Maquam Press, 1991). In 2014, The Stage was republished as part of the Books on Books series edited by Errata Editions, New York. Two additional essays, by Robert Enright and Jeffrey Ladd, complete the republication.
- Cumming, Donigan. Afterword to Lying Quiet (Toronto: Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, 2004), p. 163.
- The exhibition Donigan Cumming: Moving Pictures included a video installation, accompanied by a soundtrack, based on the stills selected for Lying Quiet.
- Prologue and Epilogue were first shown in 2005, at the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, Toronto, and later at the Galerie Éric Devlin, Montreal, as part of Le Mois de la Photo à Montréal; in 2006, they were exhibited at the Canadian Cultural Centre, Paris; and, in 2008, in Territoire mental, at Le Musée d’Art moderne et d’Art contemporain, Liège, and Mount Saint Vincent University Art Gallery, Halifax. Both are now in the collection of the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec.
- Cumming, Donigan. Presentation at Vidéographe, Montreal, July 11, 2019.
- Bédard, Catherine. Donigan Cumming. La somme, le sommeil, le cauchemar (Paris: Centre Culturel Canadien, 2006), p. 27.
- Cumming, Donigan. Kincora (Montreal: Maquam Press, 2008). The series has also been published in Pencils, Ashes, Matches & Dust (Quebec City: Éditions J’ai VU, 2009).
- On the theme of death in Cumming’s work, see especially Peggy Gale, “Touching on Donigan Cumming,” in Lying Quiet (Toronto: Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, 2004), p. 1–15 and p. 17-33.
- Choinière, France (ed.). Donigan Cumming (Montreal and Quebec City: Dazibao and VU, 2012).